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Publication : Arginine deficiency causes runting in the suckling period by selectively activating the stress kinase GCN2.

First Author  Marion V Year  2011
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  286
Issue  11 Pages  8866-74
PubMed ID  21239484 Mgi Jnum  J:170634
Mgi Id  MGI:4946999 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M110.216119
Citation  Marion V, et al. (2011) Arginine Deficiency Causes Runting in the Suckling Period by Selectively Activating the Stress Kinase GCN2. J Biol Chem 286(11):8866-74
abstractText  Suckling 'F/A2' mice, which overexpress arginase-I in their enterocytes, develop a syndrome (hypoargininemia, reduced hair and muscle growth, impaired B-cell maturation) that resembles IGF1 deficiency. The syndrome may result from an impaired function of the GH-IGF1 axis, activation of the stress-kinase GCN2, and/or blocking of the mTORC1-signaling pathway. Arginine deficiency inhibited GH secretion and decreased liver Igf1 mRNA and plasma IGF1 concentration, but did not change muscle IGF1 concentration. GH supplementation induced Igf1 mRNA synthesis, but did not restore growth, ruling out direct involvement of the GH-IGF1 axis. In C2C12 muscle cells, arginine withdrawal activated GCN2 signaling, without impacting mTORC1 signaling. In F/A2 mice, the reduction of plasma and tissue arginine concentrations to approximately 25% of wild-type values activated GCN2 signaling, but mTORC1-mediated signaling remained unaffected. Gcn2-deficient F/A2 mice suffered from hypoglycemia and died shortly after birth. Because common targets of all stress kinases (eIF2alpha phosphorylation, Chop mRNA expression) were not increased in these mice, the effects of arginine deficiency were solely mediated by GCN2.
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